California State Route 9

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Highway in California

Route 9
CS&HC Sec. 309
Length: 35 mi
(56 km)
Major cities/towns: Monte Sereno
Saratoga
Ben Lomond
Boulder Creek
Santa Cruz
Direction: North-South
JUNCTION POSTMILE
SR-1 SCR 0.05
SR-236 SCR 13.04
SR-236 SCR 20.83
SR-35 SCL 0.06
SR-17 SCL 11.45
Legend
  deleted (no longer in system)   unconstructed
  closed   crossing with no access
  begin/end concurrency, bold route is carried through
  a bold route on white background indicates termini.
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California State Highways
Current - Unconstructed - Deleted - Scenic
SR-9
SR-9

California State Highway 9 is mainly a rural and mountainous route that travels 35 mi. (56 km) from CA-1 near Santa Cruz through Ben Lomond, Boulder Creek and several smaller towns to Saratoga, where it briefly becomes known as Big Basin Way. It then turns south and becomes Saratoga-Los Gatos Road, passes through Monte Sereno and finally terminates at CA-17 in Los Gatos. Daily traffic is between 3200 and 34,500 cars. The section between the Los Gatos town limit and the intersection with CA-35 is designated a California State Scenic Route.

Contents

Route Summary

The road is a winding 2 lane road for the majority of its length until it approaches Fruitvale Avenue in Saratoga. There it briefly becomes a 4 lane road with a large center divider. However as the road enters Monte Sereno it again becomes a two lane road. This particular narrowing has caused backups in the past however they have become more infrequent since the completion of CA-85. CA-9 resumes being a 4 lane road through Downtown Los Gatos until its terminus at the junction with CA-17

History

CA-9 was created from several previously constructed roads. One of these was a toll road built in 1848 by Martin McCarty.

The segment of Highway 9 between Los Gatos and Boulder Creek was added to the State Highway system in 1913. The segment from Boulder Creek to Santa Cruz was added in 1933. The route was not signed until 1934.

Initially, Highway 9 was signed as continuing north from Saratoga on what is now Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road. This segment was later re-signed as CA-85 until 1994, when CA-85 was rerouted. The road is no longer in the State Highway system. The road then continued up Matilda Avenue to present day CA-237 where it turned east. CA-9 Continued east until it reached Gold Street in Alviso, California. The existing bridge did not exist facilitating the need for CA-9 to use the Gold Street bridge and enter downtown Alviso. CA-9 then joined First Street and continued down that street until it resumed an easterly course along the remainder of present day CA-237. At the interchange with what is now I-880, CA-9 turned north and continued along I-880 until it reached present day CA-262 at Mission Blvd. CA-9 followed Mission Blvd east until it reached present day I-680 where it again turned north until reaching present day CA-238. CA-9 then followed CA-238's route to its terminus at what is now I-580 in Castro Valley.

The southern end of CA-9 terminated at CA-17 in Santa Cruz until it was rerouted in 1981.

Landmarks

Although CA-9 is mainly rural and mountainous, there are several points of interest along the way. At the summit of the Santa Cruz mountains (the junction with CA-35), there is a vista point offering a (somewhat obstructed) view of the Bay Area. A better view can be obtained at the Russian Ridge vista point on CA-35. After pasing the summit and the descent into Santa Cruz begins, CA-9 passes Big Basin Redwoods State Park, a popular hiking spot and campground.

State Law

Legal Definition of Route 9: California Streets and Highways Code, Chapter 2, Article 3, Section 304


Route 9 is part of the Scenic Highway System, as stated by section 263.2 of the California State Highway Code.

External links

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